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Andrew
Accusation vs charges
What difference between accusation and charges in accusing meaning?
I saw sentance with both two words in it.
"These are pretty strong accusations, pretty strong charges".
Why did author use both in one sentence?
Oct 18, 2015 6:11 AM
Answers · 4
2
Peter is completely correct, however in this sentence I feel like the author is also trying to emphasis the seriousness through repetition – because usually it would be unnecessary to say both. If there are charges, there should already be accusations. Hard to know without reading it myself, but just a thought.
October 18, 2015
2
They have similar meaning however a "charge" is a formal legal term for an accusation of a crime and the first step in the process of bringing the person to court. where he or she will asked to plead guilty or not guilty to the charge.. "After his employer accused him of stealing the company's money, the Police investigated and ultimately charged him with stealing/theft".
October 18, 2015
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Andrew
Language Skills
English, French, Polish, Russian, Ukrainian
Learning Language
English, French, Polish
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